Zimbabwe Without Robert Mugabe

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe addresses people at an event before the closure of his party's 16th Annual Peoples Conference in Masvingo, about 300 kilometres south of the capital Harare, Saturday, December, 17, 2016.

AP Photo/Ben Curtis

Zimbabwe's President Emmerson Mnangagwa, center, gestures to the cheering crowd as he leaves after the presidential inauguration ceremony in the capital Harare, Zimbabwe Friday, Nov. 24, 2017. Mnangagwa was sworn in as Zimbabwe's president after Robert Mugabe resigned on Tuesday, ending his 37-year rule.

Robert Mugabe ruled Zimbabwe from the 1980s to late last year, when the Zimbabwean military seized power in a coup d’état. Mugabe ranks among the longest-ruling heads of state in the last century. His decades in public life included leading a revolution against British colonialism, entrenching a culture of corruption in the Zimbabwean government, eliminating human rights, and allegedly perpetrating crimes against humanity.

More content below this sponsor message

Joining us to discuss Mugabe’s legacy and the future of Zimbabwe is Dr. Michael Bratton, professor of political science and African studies at Michigan State University. He is the author of Power Politics in Zimbabwe, and is currently conducting more research in the country.